Parritt

E288320

Parritt is a pivotal character in Eugene O’Neill’s play "The Iceman Cometh," whose betrayal and psychological turmoil embody the work’s themes of guilt, disillusionment, and self-deception.

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Label Occurrences
Parritt canonical 1

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Statements (30)

Predicate Object
instanceOf fictional character
theatrical character
appearsIn The Iceman Cometh
associatedMovement American realism
modernist drama
characterArc confrontation with guilt
struggle with self-deception
countryOfWorkOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
creator Eugene O'Neill
surface form: Eugene O’Neill
firstPerformanceWork 1939
genre drama
hasTrait conflicted
guilt-ridden
self-deceiving
languageOfWork English
literaryPeriod 20th-century American drama
medium stage play
moralStatus betrayer
narrativeFunction embodiment of disillusionment
embodiment of guilt
embodiment of self-deception
psychologicalState turmoil
roleInWork pivotal character
settingOfWork Harry Hope’s saloon
themeAssociation betrayal
disillusionment
guilt
self-deception
workAuthor Eugene O'Neill
surface form: Eugene O’Neill
workTitle The Iceman Cometh

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.